William Morrison fought his was from poverty and obscurity to become one of the most influential citizens of Lexington. He was born in Pittsburgh, Pa., in 1817 to John and Nancy (Barns) Morrison, a family of Scots descent that settled in New Hampshire in 1719 and moved to Ohio in 1798. When William was 12, both his parents died, and he was forced to leave school.
Like his father, Mr. Morrison apprenticed as a tin and coppersmith, working in the South and St. Louis until 1840 when he relocated to Lexington. With various partners, he sold general merchandise here and opened a branch in the Kansas City area where he sold goods to Santa Fe traders. Demand became so great that he built a foundry on the Lexington riverfront in 1848, mainly to manufacture stoves which were sold throughout the West.
Mr. Morrison was a strong Union man. However, since Missouri State Guard Capt. Bledsoe had used the foundry to refit a Mexican War cannon called Old Sac and to make cannonballs, federal troops burned the foundry in 1861 to prevent further rebel use. During the federal occupation of Lexington, Mr. Morrison rebuilt and operated it for many years with up to forty employees.
In 1844, Gov. King had appointed Mr. Morrison as a director of the Fifth Branch of the Bank of Missouri at Lexington; he continued in that position when it became the Farmer's Bank of Missouri. In 1864, he partnered with Stephen Wentworth under the bank name of Wm. Morrison and Company. In 1875, the firm was recognized as the Morrison-Wentworth Bank, located at 9th and Main.
After serving as mayor, Mr. Morrison was in the state legislature in 1858, and later he served as president of the board of curators of Central Female College (Methodist) in Lexington. The building of the St. Louis and Lexington Railroad from Sedalia to Lexington in 1877 was mainly the result of his efforts.
Mr. Morrison married Elizabeth Funk in 1844, and they had four children. A grandson became a founder of the Lexington Rotary Club whose main objective is service to the community, nation and the world. At this time two great-grandsons and a great-granddaughter support Rotary International as Paul Harris Fellows. William Morrison, who died on May 4, 1894, was a public spirited leader in every aspect of life in the City of Lexington.
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